-2
akash1599
325d

## Testers, Assemble! Time to Rant About the Future of Automation!

Fellow QA comrades, gather 'round! Today, we crack open the code-caffeine vat and dive deep into the murky pits of **emerging technologies in automated software testing**. Buckle up, because this rant is about to be as unpredictable as a freshly written end-to-end test case.

AI and ML? More like Artificial Hype and Messy Learning!

Everyone's got their robot buddies these days, claiming AI and ML will write our tests, debug themselves, and order our pizza while we sip piña coladas on a testing-induced beach vacation. Hold your silicon horses, folks! These algorithms are still toddlers tripping over spaghetti lines of code. Sure, they can generate a million tests fast, but half will be chasing imaginary bugs and the other half will break faster than a promise in a sprint review. We need smarter, not just faster, and until then, I'll stick to my trusty logic and critical thinking – call me old-fashioned, but at least I get a decent night's sleep.

Shift-lefting? More like Shift-lost!

Pushing testing earlier in the SDLC sounds like a dream, right? Catch bugs before they hatch, sing Kumbaya with developers, and write test cases in rainbows and sunshine. But in reality, it's more like herding cats in a server room. Requirements are fluid, features vaporize overnight, and by the time we shift-left ourselves into a corner, the codebase has mutated into Frankenstein's monster of spaghetti logic. Sure, early testing is important, but let's not forget sanity and collaboration – communication, people, communication!

Headless browsers? More like headless chickens!

Testing without a UI? Sounds futuristic, right? Until you realize you're stuck in a black box, poking buttons in the dark, hoping you haven't just launched a nuclear missile by accident. Sure, headless browsers can be efficient, but let's not ditch the visual feedback altogether. Testing is about seeing the big picture, not just blindly following scripts. Give us back our eyes, please, and maybe a few sprinkles of user empathy while we're at it.

Low-code, no-code? More like no testing, no-clue!

Anyone can slap together an app these days with drag-and-drop tools and wishful thinking. But who's checking if it actually works? Apparently, the magical no-code fairy dust takes care of that. Don't get me wrong, accessibility is fantastic, but let's not throw quality under the bus for speed. We still need **skilled testers to ask the hard questions, break the things that are meant to be broken, and make sure that "low-code" doesn't translate to "low-quality."**

So, fellow testers, let's be the voice of reason in this technology whirlwind. Embrace the good, challenge the hype, and never lose sight of our mission: to build software that's not just functional, but fantastic! Now, excuse me while I go write some beautiful, robust, hand-crafted test cases with a side of snarky comments. Until the next rant, stay bug-free and code-strong!

P.S. Don't even get me started on RPA and blockchain testing. We can unpack that Pandora's box another day.

Comments
Add Comment